Capitol Hill Blue
Everything Gingrich touched was soiled by his corruption and toxic nature. He was, and remains, a cancer eating away at what is left of the Republican Party.

By DOUG THOMPSON
August 5, 2022

For the past several years, I have written that the destruction of the Republican party did not begin with Donald Trump or even Sarah Palin. They were opportunists who took advantage to the deterioration of the party as a valid tool of politics that began with the rise of a corrupt Congressman from Georgia.

My concerns are now validated by Dana Mibank of The Washington Post:

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On Sept. 27, 1994, more than 300 Republican members of Congress and congressional candidates gathered where the insurrectionists would one day mount the scaffolding. On that sunny morning, they assembled for a nonviolent transfer of power. Bob Michel, the unfailingly genial leader of the House Republican minority for the previous 14 years, had ushered Ronald Reagan’s agenda through the House. But he was being forced into retirement by a rising bomb thrower who threatened to oust Michel as GOP leader if he didn’t quit. “My friends,” a wistful Michel told the gathering, “I’ll not be able to be with you when you enter that promised land of having that long-sought-after majority.”

Newt Gingrich had almost nothing in common with the man he shoved aside. Michel was a portrait of civility and decency, a World War II combat veteran who knew that his political opponents were not his enemies and that politics was the art of compromise. Gingrich, by contrast, rose to prominence by forcing the resignation of a Democratic speaker of the House on what began as mostly false allegations, by smearing another Democratic speaker with personal innuendo, and by routinely thwarting Michel’s attempts to negotiate with Democrats. Gingrich had avoided service in Vietnam and regarded Democrats as the enemy, impugning their patriotism and otherwise savaging them nightly on the House floor for the benefit of C-SPAN viewers.

“Newt! Newt! Newt! Newt!” the candidates and lawmakers chanted. A pudgy 51-year-old with a helmet of gray hair approached the lectern. “The fact is that America is in trouble,” Gingrich declared. “It is impossible to maintain American civilization with 12-year-olds having babies, 15-year-olds killing each other, 17-year-olds dying of AIDS and 18-year-olds getting diplomas they can’t even read.” The pejoratives piled up in Gingrich’s shouted, finger-wagging harangue: “Collapsing … Failed so totally … Worried about their jobs … Worried about their safety … Trust broke down … Out of touch … Wasteful … Dumb … Ineffective … Out of balance … Malaise … Drug dealers … Pimps … Prostitution … Crime … Barbarism … Devastation … Human tragedy … Chaos and poverty.” “Recognize that if America fails, our children will live on a dark and bloody planet,” Gingrich told them.

Somewhere in this catalogue of catastrophe, Gingrich signed the Contract With America, a 10-point agenda proposing a balanced-budget amendment, congressional term limits and other reforms. “We have become in danger of losing our own civilization,” Gingrich warned.

Americans had seldom heard a politician talk this way, and certainly not a speaker of the House. But that’s what Gingrich became after the GOP’s landslide victory in the 1994 election. The Contract With America made little headway — only three minor provisions (paperwork reduction!) became law — but the rise of Gingrich and his shock troops set the nation on a course toward the ruinous politics of today.[/—The Washington Post

As soon as he became Speaker, Ginrcih immediately scrapped any and all talk of term limits.

“We have the power,” he bragged. “What idiot thinks we will give it up?”

Certainly not the idiots who have worked to help put the corrupt, hypocritical despot in power. Gingrich dumped one wife while she was in the hospital with cancer, another one so he could marry the committee staffer he was banging while standing on the floor of the House of Representatlives to decry then-President Bill Clinton for letting a White House intern nosh on his Johnson in the Oval Office.

As a political operative and Congressional staff member during Gingrich’s rise to power, I would often turn away in disgust whenever I had to deal with a putrid man I openly considered a “soulless son-of-a-bitch.” I was assigned to aid his GOPAC to draw support for the GOP political convention that nominated Bob Dole in a losing attempt to beat Clinton. What I saw there made me decide to leave political work and return to journalism.

His pathetic events to run for President fell flat. So did is Speakership when he had to resign in disgrace for violating the House Ethics rules and because his affair with now current wife Calista Gingrich became public.

Gingrich, of course, became a close ally of Trump. Even worse, we talked his fellow corrupt sedition ist into appointing his adulterous wife ambassador to the Vatican.

Milbank notes, correctly, that their brand of toxic politics of Gingrich was just the tip of putrid acts of Republicans. He further writes:

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Consider just a few of the milestones along this path of destruction — all of which, we can now see, made Trump possible, if not inevitable:

Long before Trump promulgated more than 30,000 falsehoods during his presidency, including disinformation about the covid-19 pandemic that contributed to countless deaths:

--House Republicans encouraged the conspiracy theory that Vincent Foster, a lawyer in the Clinton White House, had been murdered — possibly, in the belief’s craziest formulation, by Hillary Clinton. After four separate, independent investigations concluded it was suicide, Gingrich said, “I just don’t accept it,” and one of his committee chairmen, Dan Burton, shot a melon in his backyard to reenact the “murder.”

--The George W. Bush administration, to make the case for war, distorted the available intelligence to suggest that Iraq was responsible for the 9/11 attacks, that it was on the cusp of obtaining nuclear weapons and that U.S. troops would be “greeted as liberators.” When a former diplomat publicly disputed Bush’s false claims, aides retaliated by disclosing the identity of his wife, a CIA operative.
Sarah Palin, the party’s vice-presidential nominee in 2008, falsely proclaimed in 2009 the existence of “death panels” in Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act. Republican lawmakers lined up to make the false claim a centerpiece of their attempt to defeat Obamacare. About a third of Americans came to believe the falsehood.

Long before Trump spoke of immigrants as rapists and murderers coming from “shithole countries” and told Democratic congresswomen of color to “go back” to other countries:

--Patrick J. Buchanan, who ran insurgent bids for the GOP presidential nomination in 1992 and 1996, offered generous words for Hitler, lamented the treatment of “European-Americans” and “non-Jewish whites,” warned of a migrant “invasion,” and ran on a promise to “put America first.”

--Conservative radio giant Rush Limbaugh aired the song “Barack the Magic Negro,” Fox News’s Glenn Beck claimed President Obama had a “deep-seated hatred for White people,” and tea party activists had chanted the n-word at Black members of Congress outside the Capitol.

--Fox News in 2011 served as the forum for Trump and others to perpetrate the “birther” libel asserting that Obama, the first Black president, was not American-born. Palin told Obama to stop his “shuck and jive shtick.”

--Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) said in 2013 of the “dreamers” (those brought illegally to the United States as children): “For every one who’s a valedictorian, there’s another 100 out there that weigh 130 pounds and they’ve got calves the size of cantaloupes because they’re hauling 75 pounds of marijuana across the desert.”

Long before Trump told the violent Proud Boys to “stand by” instead of condemning them:

--Conservative radio host G. Gordon Liddy in 1994 told listeners that if federal agents try to disarm them, “go for a head shot” and “kill the sons of bitches.” Other hosts, and GOP members of Congress, warned of federal agents in “black helicopters” planning “a paramilitary style attack against Americans” and the need for an “armed revolution” to resist a “New World Order,” and Gingrich and other Republicans spoke supportively of antigovernment militias.

--Thousands of tea party activists, on the eve of final passage of Obamacare in the House in 2010, got to within 50 feet of the Capitol. Democrats worried about violence, and police officers struggled to maintain security, but GOP lawmakers inflamed the crowd, waving signs and leading chants of “Kill the bill.”

--Palin, urging supporters “don’t retreat, instead — RELOAD!,” in 2010 promoted a map of 20
Democratic-held congressional districts in target crosshairs. A GOP Senate nominee spoke of using “Second Amendment remedies.” Threats and vandalism against Democratic lawmakers spread, and, in 2011, Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-Ariz.), one of those listed in Palin’s map, was shot in the head by a gunman who killed six others. (There was no evidence connecting Palin’s map to the shooting, but the violent rhetoric continued afterward.)

Long before Trump discredited democratic institutions with his “big lie” about election fraud:

--Republican operatives intimidated the Miami-Dade County Elections Department into stopping the recount of the 2000 election results. A partisan crowd flooded into the elections office, chanting “Stop the fraud!” “Stop the count!” and “Cheaters!” Democratic officials were kicked, pushed and punched.

--John Ashcroft, who became attorney general after the Supreme Court’s 5-4 decision in Bush v. Gore handed the presidency to George W. Bush, falsely claimed in 2001 that dead people had voted and that “votes have been bought, voters intimidated and ballot boxes stuffed.”

--House Majority Leader Tom DeLay in 2003, trying to create a “permanent majority,” forced through a Texas redistricting that shifted six House seats to Republicans — and when Democratic legislators left the state to block the scheme, DeLay attempted to use the FBI and the Federal Aviation Administration to track them down.

--The Supreme Court’s conservative majority stacked the deck for Republicans with its 2010 Citizens United decision, which made it possible for wealthy interests to flood elections with unlimited, unregulated “dark money,” and its 2013 gutting of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which invited GOP-led states to restrict voting in ways that disproportionately affect voters of color. Republican senators cemented the high court’s reputation as an arm of the GOP when from 2016 into 2017 they blocked Obama for 11 months from filling the vacancy left by Justice Antonin Scalia’s death.

Long before the dysfunction of the Trump era:

--Gingrich in 1995 announced that he forced a shutdown of the federal government in part because he was asked to exit Air Force One via the rear stairway after a trip to Israel with President Bill Clinton. Republicans debuted a new era of manufactured crises over debt-limit deadlines, and repeated government shutdowns, whenever Democrats held the White House.

--The Republican National Committee drafted an “autopsy” in 2013 after Mitt Romney lost to Obama, calling for more outreach to Black, Hispanic, Asian and gay Americans. GOP lawmakers in the House swiftly abandoned the idea, killing a comprehensive immigration reform bill that had sailed through the Senate by a bipartisan 68-32.

--House Speaker John A. Boehner announced his retirement in 2015, later saying he was disgusted with the growing “circle of crazy” inside his party. Republicans “couldn’t govern at all,” Boehner wrote. “Incrementalism? Compromise? That wasn’t their thing,” Boehner wrote of the insurgents. “A lot of them wanted to blow up Washington. … They wanted wedge issues and conspiracies and crusades.” Boehner concluded that he was “living in Crazytown. … Every second of every day since Barack Obama became president, I was fighting one bats--t idea after another.”

–The Washington Post

Our thanks to Milbank and others who are looking back at a quarter-century of blatant moves of the Republican Party to destroy America and the nation that democracy is supposed to protect.

I worked for that party to seven years and it is a black mark on my own personal history and an insult to the nation I had tried to serve over the other 67 years of my life.

Donald Trump is a traitor to America. So is Sarah Palen, Newt Gingrich, Pat Buchanan and too many others who worked to destroy the democracy that defined our country.

Let's pray they all burn in hell.

Copyright © 2022 Capitol Hill Blue

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Post
Great post Doug.

I was in elementary school when Watergate happened. My understanding is that "dirty tricksters" have been a part of the GOP since the late 60's/early '70s and namely Roger Stone.

Something is currently going on with the GOP and it's not good. Their lies/gaslighting and trying to convince sane, decent Americans that it's raining, when the GOP is actually pissing on their leg, is beyond the pale.

Democrats have their faults too - but their faults are different and don't involve morality. The GOP's issues have everything to do with being morality - the GOP have chosen to take the road usually not taken - the immoral road in life while convincing others that the GOP is actually on the moral road.
And all because Bill Clinton didn't invite Newt to sit in the front of the plane with the cool kids.

[Linked Image from hooddemocrats.org]
It's detrimental to American democracy when citizens vote in psychologically and emotionally damaged conniving sociopaths to run our government. cry
Psychologically and emotionally damaged conniving sociopaths have been running governments since the dawn of man.

Our system is supposed to weed them out before they do too much damage. It generally works, but the damage always has to be dealt with.

And the idiots always seem to find more of them to elect.
I have continued to identify the double-whammy of Reagan and Gingrich as the beginning of the end of the Republican party as an entity. Yes, Nixon should take a good deal of blame, too, but the party - if reluctantly - took steps to respond to his excesses. Since then, the party has never held its leadership to account, and that is the very source of corruption. Reagan never paid for the Iran-contra debacle, or H.W. for the pardons, reputationally. They were simply excused their misconduct.

Gingrich tore down the infrastructure of the House and discarded all of the norms that had been built up over a century. The House has never recovered. It is more broken now than since before the Civil War, when Representative Preston Brooks, a pro-slavery Democrat from South Carolina, used a walking cane to attack Senator Charles Sumner in the chamber, an abolitionist Republican from Massachusetts. The means are different now, but the motives are the same.

Reagan, both Bushes, and Trump were all natural iterative results of the acceptance of misconduct that began with Ford's pardon of Nixon, and continues to this day. January 6 is a natural outgrowth of Gingrich's approach to governance. Remember only 10 Republican Representatives voted to impeach Trump, and 147 Republicans voted to contest the 2020 election results. Party über alles.
Originally Posted by pdx rick
Something is currently going on with the GOP and it's not good. Their lies/gaslighting ....

[Linked Image from uploads.disquscdn.com]
Originally Posted by NW Ponderer
I have continued to identify the double-whammy of Reagan and Gingrich as the beginning of the end of the Republican party as an entity. Yes, Nixon should take a good deal of blame, too, but the party - if reluctantly - took steps to respond to his excesses. Since then, the party has never held its leadership to account, and that is the very source of corruption.

iran-Contra shocked

That was my first exposure to GOP corruption.
Originally Posted by NW Ponderer
...Representative Preston Brooks, a pro-slavery Democrat from South Carolina...

Brooks was a conservative Democrat. We need to always remind ourselves of this fact and not leave the conservative part out.

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That was before Democrats decided to let People of Color in their Big Tent and Republicans in response decided to eject them. That started under FDR when he integrated the army and culminated with LBJ's Civil Rights laws. It didn't happen overnight: That took about 25 years. So "conservative Democrat" or not was not so important as that flip. In Lincoln's time, I would have been a proud Republican!
Over time, the Democratic party become less conservative, and the Republican party more conservative.

Conservative Democrats promoted slavey and even wrote Jim Crow laws and started the KKK

In 1964 when the Civil Rights Act was signed, Conservative Dixiecrat Democrats switched to the Republican party to spite Lyndon Johnson. Richard Nixon also recruited these Conservative Democrats under his "Southern Strategy" effort.

Conservatism is the only common thread to pre-1940 racist and bigoted Democrats and post-1964 racist and bigoted Republicans.

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Originally Posted by pondering_it_all
in Lincoln's time, I would have been a proud Republican!
Exactly. Republicans were Liberals when they initially started out.
Originally Posted by pdx rick
Originally Posted by pdx rick
Something is currently going on with the GOP and it's not good. Their lies/gaslighting ....

[Linked Image from uploads.disquscdn.com]

It doesn't cost them anything to lie.
In the real world, if you lie about anything on an employment application, even if they discover it ten years later, you STILL might get fired.
If you lie on your taxes, you might do time or have a large fine, and they might garnish your wages or take your stuff and auction it off.
If you lie in court under oath, it's a crime.
If you lie to police they will use it against you in court.
If you lie to a grand jury you could get sent up the river.

So far, what has The Big Lie COST any of these clowns?
Not a goddamn thing.
And I don't understand how they can get off scot free when these lies are costing everyone else a lot, and where these lies could very well trigger wars.

These lies, these BIG LIES, may wind up costing a great many more people their very lives if pushed hard enough, a great many more than the lives that were sacrificed at the US Capitol on January 6th.
And still, in a country which claims to be a nation of laws, peddling these Big Lies that do such massive harm to society, peace and the general Welfare, cost these liars NOTHING.

So how do we go about seeing to it that they do cost them?
Suggestions other than kicking their asses from here to Kingdom Come in a civil war would be much appreciated because I am pessimistic enough that I'm accepting the fact that the war is inevitable.
And just like 165 years ago, it is even doubtful that doing that horrible deed would stop the Big Lie.
No, it has to COST the individuals who spread these lies very dearly on a personal level.
We have to do whatever it takes to make it a crime to knowingly peddle dangerous lies for the express purpose of beating democracy to within an inch of its life.
Otherwise we might as well set the Constitution on fire right now, the one our families and ancestors fought, bled and died to defend.
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So how do we go about seeing to it that they do cost them?

We do the only things the constitution allows us to do...

We vote. We support candidates we like. We run for office ourselves.

Sometimes we win, sometimes we lose. That's what makes it a democracy.

Scott was my governor for eight long years, I despise the man more than you can know.
I have no idea how crooks like him and Trump get elected in the first place, nor how they get away with the blatant lies. And folks like them invariably gravitate to the republican party.
McConnell shunned him as a crackpot, which also implies much about the party itself.

The entire right-wing phenomenon is based on lies and bullsh*t and bigotry. A kind of white trash snootiness that pervades the whole party.

Like rumors through the trailer park. Amid the scent of garbage and old wet charcoal.

The lies are more entertaining than the truth, and the truth is a matter of opinion.

But once a majority of them believe the lies, they get to implement the policies they choose.

Which fail. And their asses get booted to the curb again. Because it's all based on lies.

And we, like Sysiphus, are doomed never to achieve our lofty goals...
This Greger ^^^ needs to come visit Reader Rant more often! smile
The funniest bit of trivia about Newt is he was a huge oral sex fan. He probably had some young lady under the podium half the time he was scolding Clinton for his adventures with the chubby intern. And this was widely known around DC at the time! Just not suitable for discussion by gentlemen of congress or the news media. And of course he was cheating on his wife with his "next wife" multiple times. One was even in the hospital with cancer at the time.

Just goes to show: Anytime a Republican accuses you of something, they are probably doing that very same thing themselves.
Today on NPRs Fresh Air with Terry Gross, Terry interviewed Dana Milbank. Milbank has a new book out titled, The Destructionists: The Twenty-Five Year Crack-Up of the Republican Party

Milbank states that this destruction began 25 years ago in the mid-90s when Newt Gingrich of Georgia, became the House Speaker and took the House in a more divisive direction than it had been. Milbank states that Gingrich pioneered "savage politics."

Gingrich replaced Bob Michael, a genial WWII vet, who had been the House Minority speaker for fourteen years. Michael was all about making deals and compromise. Then came Newt Gingrich - a bomb thrower who spoke a completely different language from Michael. Gingrich recommended to his peers, that they needed to started labeling Democrats as traitors, as liars, as cheaters - an entirely different way of talking about an opponent as your enemy. Defiantly a revolutionary way of speaking in politics.

When the Republicans took the House and Sentate in 1994, America never had a Speaker of the House speaking in this manner before.

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The problem with Republicans is that they have not been nasty enough. We need raise hell all of the time.
- Newt Gingrich
Originally Posted by pondering_it_all
...Anytime a Republican accuses you of something, they are probably doing that very same thing themselves...
The psychological term for that is called projection. Everything that Donald Trump accuses others of is 100% projection. smile
Originally Posted by pdx rick
This Greger ^^^ needs to come visit Reader Rant more often! smile
There is only one Greger. He doesn't approve of calls to violence or senseless hatred against those who vote against you in a democracy.

It appears somewhat anti-democratic.

That aura of trailer-park snootiness and righteous indignation lingers over both parties.

The answers usually aren't somewhere in between, but somewhere beyond where either party is willing or able to go...without major reform...which isn't gonna happen anytime soon.

It's going to take a decade or more to untangle ourselves from the mess we've gotten ourselves into. I refuse to spend the next ten years getting triggered by every headline and "getting prepared" for the upcoming "civil war".

It's not gonna happen. It can't happen here. I'm telling you, my dear, that it can't happen here.

I've been checking it out...


Poor old Zappa's dead and gone...
Trump and his cult have the best propaganda machine we have seen in modern times and it excels in opportunism. It is the mark of a good con man and he has been conning just about everyone since his youth. Gingrich used the term limit lie to capture enough votes to seize control of Congress with no plans to ever implement the limits. What scares me now are the outright calls for violence by the Trumpies in response to the Mart-a-Lago raid. Let's hope what they found will shock people back into reality.

Doug
Originally Posted by Doug Thompson
Let's hope what they found will shock people back into reality.
The issue is that these people have become cultists and are being psychologically manipulated by a powerful leader named Donald Trump who is dividing them from the rest of the country through his lies and deception and promising them an America that will never be.
"Morning Joe" host blasted conservatives for inciting violence against law enforcement officials. and he singled-out Newt Gingrich. Newt suggested that the FBI could have planted evidence against Trump.




How long before Donald Trump resorts to actually trying to shoot someone on 5th Avenue & Fox News resorts to claiming it was because of cold French fries?
Asking for a friend.
Originally Posted by Jeffery J. Haas
How long before Donald Trump resorts to actually trying to shoot someone on 5th Avenue & Fox News resorts to claiming it was because of cold French fries?
Asking for a friend.

I doubt Trump has ever fired a gun. If he has, the shot will miss the target and veer to the right. Fox News will then claim Biden caused the miss (or Barrack Obama, Christopher Wray, or Merrik Garland.

D.
Originally Posted by pdx rick
... Donald Trump who is dividing them from the rest of the country through his lies and deception and promising them an America that will never be.
I wouldn't count on it. I guess I am a pessimist, but in my eyes, we have already lost our democracy. Most people just don't know it yet. frown
Originally Posted by Kaine
Originally Posted by pdx rick
... Donald Trump who is dividing them from the rest of the country through his lies and deception and promising them an America that will never be.
I wouldn't count on it. I guess I am a pessimist, but in my eyes, we have already lost our democracy. Most people just don't know it yet. frown

Your pessimism is well founded but I think it all rests on whether or not our judicial leadership has the stomach and political will to see justice done as prescribed. Glad to see you here again, by the way.
Thanks Jeff, and I agree. If Mr. Trump remains above the law and is not prosecuted for anything (I think this will be the outcome), it will be another indicator that my pessimism is an accurate intuition.

Even if he were prosecuted, I am not so sure that makes me feel much better. The fire has already been lit and the weeds are afire. We will need major air drops to have any hope of surviving as a democratic nation.
Originally Posted by Kaine
Thanks Jeff, and I agree. If Mr. Trump remains above the law and is not prosecuted for anything (I think this will be the outcome), it will be another indicator that my pessimism is an accurate intuition.

Even if he were prosecuted, I am not so sure that makes me feel much better. The fire has already been lit and the weeds are afire. We will need major air drops to have any hope of surviving as a democratic nation.

A "conservative" judge gave a raving looney despot seven years in prison for a coup attempt and he got out in what...three?
Wrote a manifesto and reemerged even more charismatic than before, and a generation of our daddies and granddaddies (mine included) paid in blood to stop him.

I'm going to say the thing that most dare not say, because every generation or so evil takes human form in a manner so unimaginable that a nation is forced to do drastic and unthinkable things to stop it.

Ceausescu comes to mind.
I don't endorse it, I don't promote it and I don't suggest it but I suggest that we stop pretending that it won't come up as an option because it just might.
Uh...oh! Spaghetti-ohs! Newt Gingrich is a target in the J6 Committee investigation. Liz Cheney will neuter Newt.

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Gingrich, and the House when he was Speaker, is akin to the “wet market” where the Right Wing Nut Job pandemic originated.

The Gullible 95 virus.

You think Covid brain is bad… it’s nothing like Gullible 95 brain, where the victim turns into a rapacious Zombie actively hunting other brains to eat. They’re devilish hard to turn back into rational human beings.
Now that Newt has been "invited" to speak before the J6C about his role in the substitute electors scheme, this "invitation" is indicative of the committee having evidence that Gingrich both advised Trump on running ads promoting various 2020 election conspiracy theories and Gringrich's ties to the plot to declare fake Trump electors in states President Joe Biden won.

Liz Cheney can finish her last four months in Congress the way she wants, and Hell will hath no fury if Newt wants to play his usual games during Liz's last four months.


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